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India is revamping its tourism strategy in China, including opening of a full-fledged regional tourist office here headed by a top bureaucrat, as it pitches for attracting a good chunk of the country's 144 million tourists.

But it remained headless for over a year till 2016 and later apparently, it was shutdown, even after Prime Minister Narendra Modi extended e-visa facility to Chinese tourists during his visit here 2015.

Alphons is currently touring China to explore possibilities to attract more Chinese tourists to India.

Despite big campaigns and e-visa facilities, only 2.40 lakh Chinese tourists visited India last year against 14 lakh Indians who visited China. Countries all over the world are making a big pitch for attracting Chinese tourists as their numbers have crossed 144 million last year, the highest in the world.

It is just enough for India to get 10 per cent of Chinese tourists in five years which could be about 14 lakh, Alphons said.

Alphons said he is in China to find out why more Chinese are not visiting India despite various measures.

India has all basic things like good hotels with food and water facilities. India has a very large number of Chinese restaurants though some of them are spicy, Alphons said.

Tourism from China to India is not picking up also because of lack of campaigns, he said.

He denied that campaigns like the Buddhist circuit for Chinese travellers failed to work.

"Buddhist circuit never worked because we never had the infrastructure built in that. If we have infrastructure they will come," he said. The new infrastructure included six-lane highways which will be ready in two years.

For Chinese tourists, there are 38 Mandarin-speaking guides, he said.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)